Inside, a blond man with his hair cut short like a soldier’s clattered away at a typewriter. Rodriguez didn’t scowl, but he felt like it. From what he’d seen in the Army, a lot of white Confederates looked down on Sonorans and Chihuahuans almost as much as they did on Negroes—unless the Sonorans and Chihuahuans had money, of course. He laughed a sour laugh. The eight cents in his pocket didn’t qualify.
But this fellow startled him. “Buenos días. Como está Usted?” he said in pretty good Spanish. It plainly wasn’t his first language, but he managed more than well enough. “Me llamo Robert Quinn,” he went on, “Represento el Partido de Libertad en Baroyeca. En qué puedo servirle?”
“Hello, Mr. Quinn,” Rodriguez said in English to the man who represented the Freedom Party in Baroyeca. “I do not know what you can do for me. I came in because I saw you were here and I wanted to find out why.”
“Bueno. Excelente,” Quinn continued in Spanish. “Como se llama, señor?”
Rodriguez gave his name. He added, “Why does the Freedom Party have an office here?” He couldn’t imagine the Radical Liberals or the Whigs opening a headquarters in Baroyeca. The town simply wasn’t big enough.
But Quinn said, “Para ganar elecciones.”
“Having an office here will help you win elections?” Rodriguez returned to Spanish, since the Freedom Party man seemed comfortable in it. “How?”
“We did well here in 1925—we elected a Congressman from this district,” Robert Quinn replied in the same language. “We intend to do better still this year. After all, in 1927 we will elect a president. With God’s help—and some from the voters—it will be Jake Featherston.”
“I have only eight cents right now,” Rodriguez said, not mentioning the thirty-odd dollars he’d just sent to Birmingham. He kept quiet about that on purpose. Was this truly a party that might do a poor man some good? He’d find out. “With eight cents, how can I help you?”
Quinn didn’t laugh at him or tell him to go away. Instead, seriously and soberly, he began to explain exactly what Rodriguez could do for the Freedom Party, and what the Party might do for him. He talked for about ten minutes. By the time he finished, Rodriguez was sure he would go on voting Freedom as long as he lived. That wasn’t all he was sure of, either. He would go out and preach for the Party, too. He felt like one of the very first Christians in ancient days. He’d met a disciple, and now he was a disciple himself.
Colonel Irving Morrell hadn’t heard the garrison in Kamloops, British Columbia, so animated, so excited, since he’d got there from Philadelphia more than a year before. He would have been happier, though, had something military sparked the excitement. But all the gossip centered on Chevrolet’s proposed acquisition of the White Motor Company. White, as far as Morrell was concerned, made the best trucks in the world. No one seemed to care about that. What people were talking about was what the acquisition would do to the stock prices of the two companies.
By midafternoon, Morrell had had as much of that as he could take. “God forbid we should have to fight a war on a day when the market goes down,” he said.
He was a colonel, which meant he outranked everyone who sat in the mess hall with him. At last, though, a captain named David Smith said, “Well, sir, you never can tell. It might make us meaner.”
Silence fell. People waited to see how Morrell would take that. Ever since he’d come West from General Staff headquarters, he’d made a name for himself as a man no one sensible would trifle with. But Smith’s line was too good to make him angry. He grinned and said, “Here’s hoping, anyhow.”
The mess hall relaxed. He could almost feel the soft sighs of relief that came from just about everyone. In Philadelphia, a lot of soldiers had spent a lot of time laughing at him. The officers here took him seriously. His record was too good to ignore, and a colonel’s eagles carried a lot more weight in Kamloops than they had back at General Staff headquarters. That wasn’t why he’d been so eager to get out of Philadelphia; he’d never cared one way or the other about being a big fish in a small pond. All he wanted were a job he liked and the chance to do it without anybody looking over his shoulder. He hadn’t had those in Philadelphia. He did here.
Captain Smith decided to push it a little, adding, “Besides, sir, we’ll never get rich on Army pay. If we’re going to, wouldn’t you rather have us playing the market than knocking over a bank?”
That went too far. Morrell got to his feet. He carried his tray of dishes toward the waiting cooks. Over his shoulder, he answered, “If you want to get rich, you don’t belong in the Army in the first place. And if you’re not in the Army, I don’t give a damn what you’re doing. No one held a gun to your head to make you put on this uniform, Captain. If you want to resign your commission, I’ll be glad to help you with the paperwork.”
Smith turned very red. He said, “No, sir. I don’t want to do that. I don’t want to do that at all.”
Morrell handed the tray to a man in an apron who’d drawn kitchen duty. Everyone eyed him, wondering how he would reply. He didn’t want to get any deeper into the argument, so all he said was, “Remember why you did join, then, Captain.”
As he left the hall, that silence returned. His leg twinged. It hadn’t for a while. He’d been wounded when the Great War was young, and that was . . . Lord! he thought in surprise. That’s heading toward thirteen years ago now. Where’s the time gone?
He took his thick wool overcoat from its hanger and wrapped it around himself. Kamloops lay where the north and south branches of the Thompson River came together, in a valley near the foot of the Canadian Rockies. Even in Philadelphia, Morrell would have been glad to have an overcoat on most February days. There were days—and more than a few of them—in Kamloops when he would have been glad to have two of them.
Cold slapped his face when he went outside. He shoved his hands into the overcoat’s pockets to keep them from freezing. The rolling country around the town was in summer a near desert of tumbleweed and sagebrush. Snow painted it white at this season of the year, and white it would stay for another couple of months.
Morrell sighed. His breath smoked, as if he’d exhaled after a drag on a cigarette. The flat land would have been ideal for testing barrels. He’d said so, too, in the very first report he sent back to Philadelphia. He wondered if anybody had read that report, or even bothered to take it out of its envelope. He had his doubts. No one, certainly, had acted on the suggestion, or even acknowledged it.
So far as he knew, no one in the USA was testing barrels anywhere else, either. He kicked at the snow, which flew up from his boots. Down in the Empire of Mexico, the machines the Confederate-backed imperialists used were at least as good as the ones he’d been experimenting with back at Fort Leavenworth before budget cuts shut down the program. The rebels didn’t have barrels that could match them, and the rebels, by now, had just about lost the civil war.
He kicked at the snow again. The Ottoman Turks weren’t massacring Armenians these days the way they had a few years before, but American intervention had nothing to do with that. Kaiser Wilhelm—who wasn’t good old Kaiser Bill any more—had ignored U.S. protests, and so had Abdul Majid, the Ottoman sultan. They’d figured the United States had more urgent things to worry about closer to home, and they’d been right.
They made us look like a bunch of chumps, is what they did, Morrell thought as he walked toward his office. A horse-drawn garbage wagon rattled up the road toward him. He nodded to the men aboard it. The Canadian white wings pretended he didn’t exist. They took money from the American occupiers, but that didn’t mean they wanted anything else to do with them. Yes, the U.S. Army had snuffed out the latest uprising a couple of years before, but it didn’t seem to matter. The Canucks were going to stay sullen for a long, long time to come.
How do we keep them from causing more trouble, next year or five years from now or fifteen years from now or fifty years from now? Morrell wondered. He wished he could talk to some German officers, even if thing
s between the two greatest powers left in the world weren’t so friendly as they had been up till the war ended. The Kaiser’s men were occupying a hostile Belgium now, and they’d been occupying a hostile Alsace and Lorraine for more than fifty years. They had lots of practice at ruling territory that didn’t want to be ruled.
Seldom had Morrell had a wish so promptly granted. When he got to the office building, his aide-de-camp, a lieutenant named Ike Horwitz, said, “Sir, there’s a German officer waiting to see you. Said you saw action together during the war.”
“Captain Guderian, by God!” Morrell exclaimed in delight. “He was an observer with my unit when we were fighting over by Banff, just a couple of hundred miles from here.”
“Yes, sir,” Horwitz said. “Only he’s a lieutenant colonel now, if I remember German rank markings straight. Oh—and he’s got an orderly with him, a sergeant.”
Something in Horwitz’s voice changed. Morrell needed a second to realize what it was. “You don’t like the orderly?”
“No, sir,” Horwitz said with more of that same stiffness.
“Why not?” Morrell asked curiously.
“He figured out I was a Jew,” Horwitz answered. It probably hadn’t taken much figuring; Morrell’s aide-de-camp looked very Jewish indeed, with a nose of impressive proportions. “He didn’t think I spoke any German—and I don’t, not really, but Yiddish is close enough to let me understand it when I hear it.”
“Oh,” Morrell said. “Well, to hell with him. Guderian’s not like that, I can tell you for a fact. He doesn’t care one way or the other.”
Lieutenant Horwitz nodded. “He told his orderly to keep quiet and mind his own business. I just sat here and minded mine.”
“Good for you, Ike.”
“I wanted to punch the bastard right in the nose.”
“Don’t blame you a bit. But you didn’t, and that makes you a good soldier.”
Horwitz’s snort said he would sooner have been a bad soldier. Morrell went into his office. Heinz Guderian bounded up from a chair to shake his hand. Sure enough, the energetic German had a single gold pip on each fancy shoulder strap—a lieutenant colonel’s insignia. His orderly sprang to his feet, too, and gave Morrell a crisp salute. The fellow wore an Iron Cross, First Class. That gave Morrell pause; it hadn’t been easy for a noncom to win that medal. Second Class, yes—First, no. The man might be a son of a bitch, but he’d done something special during the war.
He spoke in German: “Excuse me, sir, but I know no English.”
“It’s all right,” Morrell replied in the same language. “I can get along in German.” His voice hardened a little. “And so can my aide-de-camp.”
Lieutenant Colonel Guderian grimaced. His orderly was unabashed. “So he knows what I think of his kind, does he? Well, too bad. The world would be a better place if we got rid of the lot of them.”
“Nonsense,” Morrell said sharply. He thought, Damn fool sounds like Jake Featherston, except he’s riding a different hobby horse.
The sergeant might have replied, but Guderian held up a hand and said, “Enough.” His orderly had discipline; he fumed, but he subsided. Then Guderian switched to English: “This is not why I came to talk to you, Colonel Morrell.”
“Well, what can I do for you, then?” Morrell asked.
“I was wondering if you could arrange for me a tour of occupied western Canada,” the German officer said. “We are interested in the methods you Americans use to control the lands you have won. . . . What is so funny, Colonel?”
“I’ll tell you what’s funny,” Morrell answered when he got done laughing. “What’s funny is, I was just wondering how you Germans held on to Belgium and Alsace-Lorraine. What we’ve been doing here hasn’t worked out so well as we’d have liked. The Canadians still hate our guts. We smashed their last uprising, but they’re liable to rebel again any old time. If you know a trick for keeping people quiet, I wouldn’t mind learning it.”
“What does he say, sir?” Guderian’s orderly asked. With the air of a man humoring a subordinate who didn’t really deserve it, Guderian translated. The sergeant made an almost operatic gesture of contempt. “It’s simple,” he declared. “Kill enough and you’ll frighten the rest into giving in.”
Guderian sighed. “Später, später,” he said, and turned back to Morrell. “That’s the only answer he knows—kill everything in sight.”
“You don’t get any arguments that way, anyhow,” Morrell observed.
“No, nor any chance to put things right later,” the German said. “So you Americans have no sure answers for this, either, then?”
“I’m afraid not. I’ll be glad to set up your tour for you, but I don’t think you’ll see anything very exciting,” Morrell answered. I’ll make damn sure you don’t see anything too very exciting, as a matter of fact, he thought. If you’re looking for ideas from us, that means you need ’em badly. And if you don’t get ’em, you’ll have more trouble holding down your subjects if you ever wind up in a scrap with us.
“Thank you. I should perhaps let you know certain American officers are in Belgium now, trying to learn from us.” Guderian smiled and shrugged. “Between us, your country and mine share the problems of the strong, nicht wahr?”
“Yes,” Morrell said. And I bet our boys don’t learn one damn thing from you, either, except where the officers’ brothels are. He wagged a finger at the German. “Nobody’s looking at what you’re doing in the east, in Poland and the Ukraine?”
Heinz Guderian shook his head. “No, Colonel, no one looks there—and it is as well that no one does, too.” His eyes swung toward his tough-talking orderly. “In the east, his methods prevail. Poland pretends to be a kingdom. The Ukraine . . .” He shook his head. “After all, they’re only Slavs.” He might have been a Confederate saying, After all, they’re only niggers. Morrell smiled with half his mouth. Either way, God help the poor bastards on the receiving end.
* * *
At seventeen, Mary McGregor had got used to being taller than her mother. Her father, after all, had been a big man. She remembered that very well, though these days she had trouble calling up the memory of just what his voice had sounded like.
She also remembered when her mother’s hair had been the color of a bright new penny. Now she couldn’t help noticing how much gray streaked that once-bright hair. She hadn’t noticed it as it spread; one day, it seemed, that gray had simply appeared, as if by magic.
But magic is supposed to be good, Mary thought, looking out across the fields she and her mother and her sister and whatever hired man they got for the spring would be planting soon. Soon, but not yet: snow, a deeper blanket than usual, still covered those fields. Winter had been hard, even for Manitoba.
Mary clenched her fists so that her nails dug into her palms. This far north, the growing season was short enough anyhow. A late spring could make harvest touch-and-go before frosts came again in early fall. If they didn’t get a good crop . . .
Well, so what? Mary thought, and went out to tend the horse and the cow and the rest of the livestock in the barn. What if we’ve got no money and they throw us off the farm? She knew the family had relatives back in Ontario; her father had come west to Manitoba when he was a boy. But the McGregors weren’t close to any of those kin. Mary’d never met a one of them. Would they take us in? Times were supposed to be even harder back there than they were here—not only had Ontario been fought over harder than Manitoba, the rebellion there had been worse.
We’re on our own. Nobody cares whether we live or die. Mary shook her head. That wasn’t true. The Americans hoped the McGregors died. They’d killed her brother, Alexander. They’d killed her father, too. Oh, yes, his own bomb, meant for General Custer, had been the actual means of his death, but he never would have become a bomber in the first place if the stinking Yanks hadn’t decided Alexander was plotting against them and stood him against a wall.
Some of those dark thoughts faded away when Mary went into the barn.
It was warmer in there, with the walls holding out the wind and holding in the animals’ body warmth. Somebody from the city might have wrinkled his nose at the odor. Mary took it for granted; she’d smelled it all her life. And the work distracted her. She gave the horse and cow and sheep hay and put down corn for the chickens. Then she mucked out the stalls. The manure would go on the garden and on as much of the fields as it would cover.
She handled pitchfork and shovel with matter-of-fact skill. Her hands had thick bands of callus across the palms. Her nails were short and blunt and dirty. A dozen scars seamed her fingers and the backs of her hands—anyone who did a lot of work with sharp tools had accidents now and then. Every once in a while, she thought wistfully of a manicure, but how much good would it do? A day after she got it, she’d be back in the barn and out in the fields once more.
Hens squawked and tried to peck as she lifted them off their nests so she could gather eggs. One of them did more than try; the bird’s beak drew blood. She gave it a baleful stare. “Chicken and dumplings,” she whispered. “Fried chicken. Chicken soup.” The bird looked back out of beady little eyes. It was too stupid to be afraid. It was only indignant at having its nest robbed—and, being a hen, would forget about that in short order.
Instead of taking the basket of eggs straight back to the house, Mary sat down for a moment to rest. She leaned back against an old wagon wheel that had been sitting in the barn ever since she was a little girl. The iron tire on the wheel showed red streaks of rust. The wheel had a couple of broken spokes. Not for the first time, she wondered why her father had left it there instead of either repairing it or getting what use he could from the wood and the iron. Letting things lie idle wasn’t like him.
She shrugged. She’d never get the chance to ask him now. If she ever needed anything that wheel could provide, she wouldn’t hesitate to take it. Or, if she had to, she thought she could fix it. She hadn’t tried her hand at carpentry till her father died. As with so much else, she’d had to learn the hard way—several of the scars on her hands came from slips. But she could do things nowadays that would have amazed her a few years before.
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